#22613: fix several factual errors in builtin docs (thanks Jacques Ducasse)
diff --git a/Doc/library/functions.rst b/Doc/library/functions.rst
index c9d34dc..1683b29 100644
--- a/Doc/library/functions.rst
+++ b/Doc/library/functions.rst
@@ -218,7 +218,7 @@
The optional arguments *flags* and *dont_inherit* control which future
statements (see :pep:`236`) affect the compilation of *source*. If neither
is present (or both are zero) the code is compiled with those future
- statements that are in effect in the code that is calling compile. If the
+ statements that are in effect in the code that is calling :func:`compile`. If the
*flags* argument is given and *dont_inherit* is not (or is zero) then the
future statements specified by the *flags* argument are used in addition to
those that would be used anyway. If *dont_inherit* is a non-zero integer then
@@ -233,6 +233,9 @@
This function raises :exc:`SyntaxError` if the compiled source is invalid,
and :exc:`TypeError` if the source contains null bytes.
+ If you want to parse Python code into its AST representation, see
+ :func:`ast.parse`.
+
.. note::
When compiling a string with multi-line code in ``'single'`` or
diff --git a/Doc/library/stdtypes.rst b/Doc/library/stdtypes.rst
index 56f0957..fa4304c 100644
--- a/Doc/library/stdtypes.rst
+++ b/Doc/library/stdtypes.rst
@@ -433,8 +433,7 @@
operations and higher than the comparisons; the unary operation ``~`` has the
same priority as the other unary numeric operations (``+`` and ``-``).
-This table lists the bitwise operations sorted in ascending priority
-(operations in the same box have the same priority):
+This table lists the bitwise operations sorted in ascending priority:
+------------+--------------------------------+----------+
| Operation | Result | Notes |
@@ -722,9 +721,8 @@
``*`` operations have the same priority as the corresponding numeric operations.
[3]_ Additional methods are provided for :ref:`typesseq-mutable`.
-This table lists the sequence operations sorted in ascending priority
-(operations in the same box have the same priority). In the table, *s* and *t*
-are sequences of the same type; *n*, *i* and *j* are integers:
+This table lists the sequence operations sorted in ascending priority.
+In the table, *s* and *t* are sequences of the same type; *n*, *i* and *j* are integers:
+------------------+--------------------------------+----------+
| Operation | Result | Notes |